soarwitheagles
True BYH Addict
Hi again everyone!
Soar here...
Hmmm....where to start with the explanation...
I will try here:
1. A friend of ours was cutting up massive amounts of pine lumber to make thousands of beehive boxes, tops, bottoms, etc. We went to visit him. He offered us literally truck loads of left over pine lumber that he did not care to use on his premium beehive boxes...It was free so...well, we loaded it up and took it home [I find it really difficult to say no to freebies...esp. when on a tight budget].
2. On Craigslist, we found another person offering truckloads of ripped pieces of plywood for pennies...so, yes, we loaded up. I especially went out of my way to load truckloads of the 1" plywood pieces and the 1 by 4 pine...
3. I recently learned about the importance of building lots of nucs...so, after doing tons of reading, the adventure began this morning.
A. The pine pieces that were already dado'd I cut to 12".
B. The 1" plywood I cut to 9 3/4" by 20"
C. Experimented and made some telescoping tops and some normal bottoms.
D. Realized I can put 8 of the large frames per box, with .5 inch left over.
I cut wood for nine of these today then began the assemble and I really feel tired, but I feel it was worth it because I think I only paid about one dollar per box.
Now, I have some questions...
I was thinking to just let these be extra large nucs [my understanding is most nucs are only 5 frames...]
But I also read about how people take one box and make it into 2, 3, or 4 nucs by sectioning it off and drilling holes in four different areas of the box..
So, I was thinking about placing a 1/4" divider wall in the middle of the boxes, drilling a bee entry hole on each side of the box, make a special top, and then I would have two nucs per box.
Anyone know if this will work?
Or, should I simply be content with having an 8 frame nuc?
Thanks in advance!
Soar
Soar here...
Hmmm....where to start with the explanation...
I will try here:
1. A friend of ours was cutting up massive amounts of pine lumber to make thousands of beehive boxes, tops, bottoms, etc. We went to visit him. He offered us literally truck loads of left over pine lumber that he did not care to use on his premium beehive boxes...It was free so...well, we loaded it up and took it home [I find it really difficult to say no to freebies...esp. when on a tight budget].
2. On Craigslist, we found another person offering truckloads of ripped pieces of plywood for pennies...so, yes, we loaded up. I especially went out of my way to load truckloads of the 1" plywood pieces and the 1 by 4 pine...
3. I recently learned about the importance of building lots of nucs...so, after doing tons of reading, the adventure began this morning.
A. The pine pieces that were already dado'd I cut to 12".
B. The 1" plywood I cut to 9 3/4" by 20"
C. Experimented and made some telescoping tops and some normal bottoms.
D. Realized I can put 8 of the large frames per box, with .5 inch left over.
I cut wood for nine of these today then began the assemble and I really feel tired, but I feel it was worth it because I think I only paid about one dollar per box.
Now, I have some questions...
I was thinking to just let these be extra large nucs [my understanding is most nucs are only 5 frames...]
But I also read about how people take one box and make it into 2, 3, or 4 nucs by sectioning it off and drilling holes in four different areas of the box..
So, I was thinking about placing a 1/4" divider wall in the middle of the boxes, drilling a bee entry hole on each side of the box, make a special top, and then I would have two nucs per box.
Anyone know if this will work?
Or, should I simply be content with having an 8 frame nuc?
Thanks in advance!
Soar